15 research outputs found
Biochemical and haematological values in abattoir pigs with and without subclinical lesions
The biochemical and haematological profiles of 379 pigs with or without various gross pathological lesions in an abattoir in Zimbabwe were studied to see whether there were any differences between the levels of haematological and biochemical values, and health status (with and without pathological lesions). On the basis of observable gross pathology, 134 pigs were classified as having one or more subclinical lesions (liver milk spot, pneumonia, pleurisy, pericarditis, abscesses and arthritis). Seventy six of these were males and 58 females. There were observable sex differences in the mean haematological and biochemical values obtained. Erythrocyte counts showed significant differences in mean values (P < 0,05) among groups of pigs found with various pathological lesions. The biochemical values showed significant group differences for ALP, ALT. AST, and LDH.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat X Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.University of Zimbabwe Research Boardmn201
The epidemiology of rabies in Zimbabwe. 2. Rabies in jackals (Canis adustus and Canis mesomelas)
The epidemiology of rabies in Canis adustus (the side-striped jackal) and Canis mesomelas (the black-backed jackal) in Zimbabwe is described using data collected from 1950-1996. Cases in the two species made up 25,2% of all confirmed cases, second only to domestic dogs. Since the species of jackal cases was not recorded on rabies submission forms, the country was divided into areas according to species dominance and jackal cases were assigned to either C. adustus or C. mesomelas dominant zones or a sympatric zone where the relative status of the species is not known. Jackal rabies in both species is maintained in the commercial farming sector. Jackal rabies in the C. adustus zone occurs as dense epidemics, which begin at a single focus and spread centrifugally. The foci were initiated by rabid dogs, but once initiated the epidemic is maintained by C. adustus independently of other species. The extent of outbreaks in the C. adustus zone was limited by geographical (Ianduse type and jackal species interface) boundaries. Jackal rabies in C. adustus zones showed two seasonal peaks with the main peak occurring during late summer and the second peak during winter. In the C. mesomelas zone jackal rabies was more sparse but it occurred during most years. C. mesomelas is also able to maintain rabies independently of other species, although the epidemiology of the disease in this species is unclear. Transmission of rabies cycles between the two jackal species zones does not appear to occur as epidemics terminate when crossing the C. adustus and C. mesomelas interface boundaries.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat v.9 was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.mn201
The epidemiology of rabies in Zimbabwe. 1. Rabies in dogs (Canis familiaris)
The epidemiology of rabies in dogs in Zimbabwe is described using data from 1950, when rabies was
re-introduced after a 37 -year absence, to 1996. Dogs constituted 45,7% of all laboratory-confirmed
rabies cases and were the species most frequently diagnosed with the disease. Slightly more cases
were diagnosed from June to November than in other months. From 1950 to the early 1980s, most
dog cases were recorded from commercial farming areas, but since the early 1980s most have been
recorded from communal (subsistence farming) areas. This change appears to be due to improved
surveillance in communal areas and not to any change in the prevalence of rabies. Dog rabies therefore
appears to be maintained mainly in communal area dog populations, particularly the large communal
area blocks. Urban rabies was not important except in the city of Mutare. Where dog rabies
prevalence was high, the disease was cyclic with periods between peak prevalence ranging from 4-
7 years. Dog rabies cases were, on the whole, independent of jackal rabies and rabies in other carnivores.
There was a significant negative relationship between the annual number of rabies vaccine
doses administered nationally to dogs and the annual number of dog rabies cases lagged by one year,
indicating that the past levels of immunisation coverage have had a significant effect on the number
of rabies cases. However, dog vaccination coverage has clearly not been adequate to prevent the
regular occurrence of rabies in dogs.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat v.9 was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.mn201
Oral rabies vaccination of jackals : progress in Zimbabwe
Work on the development of an oral vaccination
system for jackals is underway at the Veterinary Laboratory
(Diagnostics and Research Branch), Zimbabwe.
It is anticipated that the system will be used to
control the large rabies epidemics that occur in
jackals in Zimbabwe.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.mn201
Efficacy of SAD (Berne) rabies vaccine given by the oral route in two species of jackal (Canis mesomelas and Canis adustus)
Eight black-backed jackals and seven side-striped jackals were given SAD (Berne) rabies vaccine by direct oral instillation. Three different vaccine doses were used: 106.3, 106.8 and 107.5 median tissue culture infectious doses. Two additional jackals were given vaccine in chicken heads. One group of jackals was challenged with a lethal dose of jackal-derived rabies virus 1 month and a second group 12 months after vaccination. All 17 vaccinated jackals developed high and persistent serum neutralizing antibody titres. All challenged jackals resisted a lethal dose of rabies virus, whereas 3 control jackals given the same challenge developed rabies